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Transcript
Page 1 of 8
KEY CONCEPT
Chemical reactions alter
arrangements of atoms.
BEFORE, you learned
NOW, you will learn
• Atoms of one element differ
from atoms of all other
elements
• Chemical bonds hold
compounds together
• Chemical bonds may be ionic
or covalent
• About chemical changes and
how they occur
• About three types of chemical
reactions
• How the rate of a chemical
reaction can be changed
VOCABULARY
EXPLORE Chemical Changes
chemical reaction p. 393
reactant p. 395
product p. 395
precipitate p. 396
catalyst p. 400
How can you identify a chemical change?
MATERIALS
PROCEDURE
1
Pour about 3 cm (1 in.) of vinegar into the
bowl. Add a spoonful of salt. Stir until the
salt dissolves.
2 Put the pennies into the bowl. Wait two
minutes, and then put the nail into the bowl.
3 Observe the nail after five minutes and
•
•
•
•
•
•
vinegar
clear bowl
plastic spoon
table salt
20 pennies
large
iron nail
record your observations.
WHAT DO YOU THINK?
• What did you see on the nail? Where do you
think it came from?
• Did a new substance form? What
evidence supports your conclusion?
Atoms interact in chemical reactions.
COMBINATION NOTES
Use combination notes
to organize information
about how atoms
interact during
chemical reactions.
You see substances change every day. Some changes are physical, such
as when liquid water changes to water vapor during boiling. Other
changes are chemical, such as when wood burns to form smoke and
ash, or when rust forms on iron. During a chemical change, substances
change into one or more different substances.
A chemical reaction produces new substances by changing the
way in which atoms are arranged. In a chemical reaction, bonds
between atoms are broken and new bonds form between different
atoms. This breaking and forming of bonds takes place when particles
of the original materials collide with one another. After a chemical
reaction, the new arrangements of atoms form different substances.
Chapter 12: Chemical Reactions 393
Page 2 of 8
Physical Changes
A change in the state of a substance is an example of a physical change.
The substance may have some different properties after a physical
change, but it is still the same substance. For example, you know that
water can exist in three different physical states: the solid state (ice), the
liquid state (water), and the gas state (water vapor). However, regardless
of what state water is in, it still remains water, that is, H2O molecules.
As ice melts, the molecules of water move around more quickly, but
the molecules do not change. As water vapor condenses, the molecules
of water move more slowly, but they are still the same molecules.
Substances can undergo different kinds of physical changes.
For example, sugar dissolves in water but still tastes sweet because
the molecules that make up sugar do not change when it dissolves.
The pressure of helium changes when it is pumped from a highpressure tank into a balloon, but the gas still remains helium.
Check Your Reading
What happens to a substance when it undergoes
a physical change?
When water changes from
a liquid to a solid, it undergoes
a physical change.
Ice is composed of water
molecules that are locked
together.
Liquid water is composed
of molecules that move freely
past each other.
394 Unit 3: Chemical Interactions
Page 3 of 8
Chemical Changes
Water can also undergo a chemical change. Water
molecules can be broken down into hydrogen and
oxygen molecules by a chemical reaction called
electrolysis. When an electric current is passed through
liquid water (H2O), it changes the water into two
gases—hydrogen and oxygen. The molecules of
water break apart into individual atoms, which then
recombine into hydrogen molecules (H2) and oxygen
molecules (O2). The original material (water) changes
into different substances through a chemical reaction.
Electrolysis of Water
hydrogen gas (H2)
oxygen gas (O2)
water (H2O)
Hydrogen and oxygen are used as rocket fuel for the
space shuttle. During liftoff, liquid hydrogen and liquid
oxygen are combined in a reaction that is the opposite
of electrolysis. This reaction produces water and a large
amount of energy that helps push the shuttle into orbit.
Check Your Reading
How does a chemical change differ from
a physical change?
Water molecules can be split apart to form
separate hydrogen and oxygen molecules.
Reactants and Products
Reactants are the substances present at the beginning of a chemical
reaction. In the burning of natural gas, for example, methane (CH4) and
oxygen (O2) are the reactants in the chemical reaction. Products are the
substances formed by a chemical reaction. In the burning of natural gas,
carbon dioxide (CO2) and water (H2O) are the products formed by
the reaction. Reactants and products can be elements or compounds,
depending on the reaction taking place.
During a chemical reaction, bonds between atoms in the reactants
are broken and new bonds are formed in the products. When natural
gas is burned, bonds between the carbon and hydrogen atoms in methane are broken, as are the bonds between the oxygen atoms in oxygen
molecules. New bonds are formed between carbon and oxygen in
carbon dioxide gas and between hydrogen and oxygen in water vapor.
Reactants—bonds broken
methane +
(CH4)
H
H
C
H
oxygen
(O2)
O
Products—new bonds formed
carbon dioxide + water
(CO2)
(H2O)
O
O
O
H
O
C
O
H
O
O
H
Check Your Reading
H
H
What must happen for reactants to be changed into products?
Chapter 12: Chemical Reactions 395
Page 4 of 8
Evidence of Chemical Reactions
Some chemical changes are easy to observe—the products formed
by the rearrangement of atoms look different than the reactants.
Other changes are not easy to see but can be detected in other ways.
Substances often change color during a chemical
reaction. For example, when gray iron rusts, the product that forms
is brown, as shown in the photograph below.
Color Change
VOCABULARY
Remember to use a
four square diagram for
precipitate and other
vocabulary terms.
Formation of a Precipitate Many chemical reactions form products
that exist in a different physical state from the reactants. A solid product
called a precipitate may form when chemicals in two liquids react, as
shown in the photograph below. Seashells are often formed this way
when a sea creature releases a liquid that reacts with seawater.
Color Change
Formation of a Precipitate
Chemical reactions may produce a gas, like that
often formed when antacid pills are mixed with excess stomach acid.
The photograph below shows an example in which carbon dioxide gas
is produced by a chemical reaction.
Formation of a Gas
Temperature Change Most chemical reactions involve a temperature
change. Sometimes this change can be inferred from the observation
of a flame, as in the burning of the metal magnesium in the photograph
below. Other temperature changes are not immediately obvious. If you
have touched concrete before it hardens, you may have noticed that it
felt warm. This warmth is due to a chemical reaction.
Formation of a Gas
396 Unit 3: Chemical Interactions
Temperature Change
Page 5 of 8
Chemical reactions can be classified.
Scientists classify chemical reactions in several ways to help make the
different types of reactions easier to understand. All reactions form
new products, but the ways in which products are made can differ.
In a synthesis reaction, a new compound is formed by the
combination of simpler reactants. For example, nitrogen dioxide (NO2),
a component of smog, forms when nitrogen and oxygen combine in
the air.
Synthesis
N2
N
+
N
2O2
O
O
O
O
Synthesis means “making
a substance from simpler
substances.”
2NO2
N
O
O
N
O
O
In a decomposition reaction, a reactant breaks down
into simpler products, which could be elements or other compounds.
Decomposition reactions can be thought of as being the reverse of
synthesis reactions. For example, water can be decomposed into its
elements—hydrogen and oxygen.
Decomposition
2H2O
reading tip
+
2H2
reading tip
Decomposition means
“separation into parts.”
O2
O
H
H
H H
O
H
O
H H
O
H
In a combustion reaction, one reactant is always oxygen
and another reactant often contains carbon and hydrogen. The carbon
and hydrogen atoms combine with oxygen, producing carbon dioxide
and water. The burning of methane is a combustion reaction.
Combustion
CH4
+
H
C
H
H
2O2
O
H
2H2O
C
O
H
H
O
O
H
Check Your Reading
Combustion is the process
of burning with oxygen.
O
O
O
O
+
CO2
reading tip
H
How are synthesis reactions different from
decomposition reactions?
Chapter 12: Chemical Reactions 397
Page 6 of 8
The rates of chemical reactions can vary.
Most chemical reactions take place when particles of reactants collide
with enough force to react. Chemical reactions can occur at different
rates. Striking a match causes a very quick chemical reaction, while
the rusting of an iron nail may take months. However, the rate of a
reaction can be changed. For instance, a nail can be made to rust more
quickly. Three physical factors—concentration, surface area, and temperature—and a chemical factor—a catalyst—can greatly affect the
rate of a chemical reaction.
VISUALIZATION
CLASSZONE.COM
Observe how changing
the concentration of a
reactant can change the
rate of a reaction.
Concentration
Concentration measures the number of particles present in a certain
volume. A high concentration of reactants means that there is a large
number of particles that can collide and react. Turning the valve on a
gas stove to increase the flow of gas increases the concentration of
methane molecules that can combine with oxygen in the air. The
result is a bigger flame and a faster combustion reaction.
Surface Area
Suppose one of the reactants in a chemical reaction is present as a
single large piece of material. Particles of the second reactant cannot
get inside the large piece, so they can react only with particles on the
surface. To make the reaction go faster, the large piece of material
could be broken into smaller pieces before the reaction starts.
Chemical Reactions
How can the rate of a reaction be changed?
SKILL FOCUS
Inferring
PROCEDURE
1
Place a whole seltzer tablet in one cup. Crush the second tablet and
place it in the second cup.
2 At the same time, fill both cups halfway with water.
MATERIALS
WHAT DO YOU THINK?
•
•
•
•
• How long did the whole tablet fizz? What about the crushed tablet?
TIME
• How are these results related to the rate of a chemical reaction? Explain.
15 minutes
3 Time how long the tablet in each cup fizzes.
CHALLENGE How might your results be related to
collisions between particles during a chemical reaction?
398 Unit 3: Chemical Interactions
2 seltzer tablets
2 plastic cups
tap water
stopwatch
Page 7 of 8
Breaking a large piece of material into smaller parts increases the
surface area of the material. All of the inner material has no surface
when it is inside a larger piece. Each time the large piece is broken,
however, more surfaces are exposed. The amount of material does not
change, but breaking it into smaller parts increases its surface area.
Increasing the surface area increases the rate of the reaction.
Check Your Reading
Why does a reaction proceed faster when the reactants have
greater surface areas?
Temperature
The rate of a reaction can be increased by making the particles move
faster. The result is that more collisions take place per second and
occur with greater force. The most common way to make the particles
move faster is to add energy to the reactants, which will raise their
temperature.
reminder
Temperature is the average
amount of kinetic energy of
the particles in a substance.
Many chemical reactions during cooking go very slowly, or do not
take place at all, unless energy is added to the reactants. Too much heat
can make a reaction go too fast, and food ends up burned. Chemical
reactions can also be slowed or stopped by decreasing the temperature
of the reactants. Again, think about cooking. The reactions that take
place during cooking can be stopped by removing the food from the
heat source.
Particles and Reaction Rates
Changes in
Reactants
Normal
Reaction Rate
Increased
Reaction Rate
Concentration An increase in
concentration of the reactants
increases the number of
particles that can interact.
Surface area An increase in
the surface area of the reactants increases the number of
particles that can interact.
Temperature Adding energy
makes particles move faster
and increases temperature.
The increase in motion allows
reactants to collide and react
more frequently.
Chapter 12: Chemical Reactions 399
Page 8 of 8
Catalysts
RESOURCE CENTER
The rate of a reaction can be changed chemically by adding a catalyst.
CLASSZONE.COM
A catalyst is a substance that increases the rate of a chemical reaction
Learn more about catabut is not itself consumed in the reaction. This means that after the
lysts and how they work
reaction is complete, the catalyst remains unchanged. Catalysts are
in living things.
very important for many industrial and biological reactions. In fact,
many chemical reactions would proceed slowly or not take place at all
without catalysts.
reactants
new product
reactants
combined
unchanged
enzyme
enzyme
(catalyst)
1
2
An enzyme is a catalyst
for chemical reactions in
living things.
3
Enzymes allow reactions
that would not normally
take place to occur.
A new product is made,
but the enzyme is not
changed by the reaction.
In living things, catalysts called enzymes are absolutely necessary
for life. Without them, many important reactions could not take place
under the conditions within your body. In fact, in 2003, scientists
reported that they had discovered the slowest known chemical reaction
in living things. This reaction would normally take one trillion years.
Enzymes, though, allow the reaction to occur in 0.01 seconds.
Check Your Reading
Why are catalysts important in chemical reactions?
KEY CONCEPTS
CRITICAL THINKING
1. How do physical changes differ
from chemical changes?
Explain.
4. Synthesize What evidence
shows that the burning of
methane is a chemical reaction?
2. Describe four types of evidence
of a chemical reaction.
5. Compare What about
combustion reactions makes
them different from either
synthesis or decomposition
reactions?
3. Describe the ways in which the
rate of a chemical reaction can
be changed.
400 Unit 3: Chemical Interactions
CHALLENGE
6. Apply How might the chewing
of food be related to the rate
of a chemical reaction—
digestion—that occurs in your
body? Explain.